Abstract

BackgroundAnxiety is one of the leading causes of mental health disability around the world. Currently, a majority of the population who experience anxiety go undiagnosed or untreated. New and innovative ways of diagnosing and monitoring anxiety have emerged using smartphone sensor–based monitoring as a metric for the management of anxiety. This is a novel study as it adds to the field of research through the use of nonidentifiable smartphone usage to help detect and monitor anxiety remotely and in a continuous and passive manner.ObjectiveThis study aims to evaluate the accuracy of a novel mental behavioral profiling metric derived from smartphone usage for the identification and tracking of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD).MethodsSmartphone data and self-reported 7-item GAD anxiety assessments were collected from 229 participants using an Android operating system smartphone in an observational study over an average of 14 days (SD 29.8). A total of 34 features were mined to be constructed as a potential digital phenotyping marker from continuous smartphone usage data. We further analyzed the correlation of these digital behavioral markers against each item of the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7) and its influence on the predictions of machine learning algorithms.ResultsA total of 229 participants were recruited in this study who had completed the GAD-7 assessment and had at least one set of passive digital data collected within a 24-hour period. The mean GAD-7 score was 11.8 (SD 5.7). Regression modeling was tested against classification modeling and the highest prediction accuracy was achieved from a binary XGBoost classification model (precision of 73%-81%; recall of 68%-87%; F1-score of 71%-79%; accuracy of 76%; area under the curve of 80%). Nonparametric permutation testing with Pearson correlation results indicated that the proposed metric (Mental Health Similarity Score [MHSS]) had a colinear relationship between GAD-7 Items 1, 3 and 7.ConclusionsThe proposed MHSS metric demonstrates the feasibility of using passively collected nonintrusive smartphone data and machine learning–based data mining techniques to track an individuals’ daily anxiety levels with a 76% accuracy that directly relates to the GAD-7 scale.

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